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Response To St. Anselm's 'Ontological Argument'

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In The Ontological Argument, St. Anselm argues that it would be a self-contradiction if a being that none greater can be conceived did not exist. Through relations of premises, which pertain to ideas in our minds and actuality, Anselm draws the conclusion that an all-powerful being must exist. Many philosophers realize, however, that the ontological argument is problematic in that the relationship drawn between mental and actual reality is not clearly stated. In this paper I will argue that the lack of distinction between reality and beings that exist in the mind proves to be a weakness in the ontological argument. I will do this first by presenting an important philosopher who directly responds to the ontological argument, then I will further develop my argument with the notion that Anselm’s argument is too ambiguous considering we can only comprehend finite beings, and finally, I will address a response to Aquinas’s objection and why this proves to have weaknesses of its own. The ontological argument is stated as such: by definition, God is a being that none greater can be imagined. This being exists as an idea in the mind. Other things equal, a being that exists as an idea in the mind and in reality is greater than a being that exists only in the …show more content…
Thomas Aquinas has two objections to Anselm’s ontological argument. The primary objection that I will be focusing on in this paper is the rejection of Anselm’s second premise on the grounds that we have no real idea of what “a being in which none greater can be imagined” truly means. Assuming the greatest being imagined is God, Aquinas suggests that we cannot conceive of God the way Anselm proposes due to the fact that we do not know the nature of God. The ontological argument would then only be meaningful to someone who fully understands the essence of God completely. The only being that can understand God is God himself, meaning the ontological argument can only be applied to

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